| State Senator Rob Kane (R-32), ranking
member on the General Assembly’s Banks Committee,
today hailed passage of a mortgage reform bill aimed at
mitigating the economic impact of the sub-prime lending
crisis in Connecticut. The legislation, HB 5577, creates
two programs to help homeowners avoid foreclosure. The
bill authorizes the state to buy mortgages and place eligible
borrowers on an affordable repayment plan. It will also
help protect people with poor credit from purchasing loans
they cannot repay.
“The sub-prime lending crisis is a major contributing
factor to the current economic downturn,” said
Senator Kane. “I am pleased Connecticut is taking
a leading role in addressing this crisis, and we are
doing it in a way that is fair to lenders, fair to homeowners
facing foreclosure, and most importantly, fair to Connecticut
taxpayers.”
HB 5577, an Act Concerning Responsible and Economic
Security, is now on the way to Governor M. Jodi Rell’s
desk. Among other things, it creates the Homeowners’
Equity Recovery Opportunity (HERO) program through which
the state can purchase mortgages directly from lenders.
Eligible owner-occupants of one-to-four family residences,
including condominiums will then repay the state, with
the HERO loan in the first lien position.
“It is important to note, I would not have supported
a public bailout of people who got into loans they knew
they could never repay,” said Senator Kane, who
worked with the Democratic chairmen of the Banks Committee
to craft compromise legislation. Under HB 5577, eligible
borrowers must have made an effort to meet their financial
obligations to the best of their ability; must have
sufficient and stable income to support timely repayment
of a HERO loan; must have legal title to the mortgaged
property and reside in it as a permanent resident; and
must have the ability to account for cash flow if they
have stopped making monthly payments by showing how
the funds were escrowed, saved or redirected. Furthermore,
the legislation includes additional provisions for mortgage
and housing programs.
“This bill is not a public bailout. It is a responsible
and necessary reaction to a problem that affects every
aspect of our state and national economy . This bill
will help clean-up the problems caused by the bad loans
and bad decisions made in recent years. But, more importantly,
by tightening lending restrictions and holding mortgage
brokers to the same high standards as banks, this bill
will help Connecticut avoid a similar crisis in the
future,” said Senator Kane.
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